@booklet {11571, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Broad Dutty Water: A Sunken Story{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = {141/5/6}, year = {2021}, note = {

Rpt. in The Best American Science Fiction \& Fantasy\™ 2022. Ed Rebecca Roanhorse. Series ed. John Joseph Adams (New York/Boston, MA: Mariner Books/HarperCollins, 2022), 110-135; and in The Year\’s Best African Speculative Fiction 2022. Ed. Oghenechovwe Donald Ekpeki; Eugen Bacon, and Milton Davis (Np: Caezik SF \& Fantasy in partnership with O.D. Ekpeki Presents, 2023), 51-76.

}, month = {November/December 2021}, pages = {6-31}, abstract = {

The story is set in the area that used to be Florida and the islands of the Caribbean, most of which is now under water. The protagonist is a young woman living in one of the communities on rafts that scavenge for anything useable or that can be repurposed.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Guyanese author, Jamaican author, Trinidadian author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-358-69012-2 }, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {[Noelle] Nalo Hopkinson (b. 1960)} } @booklet {11218, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Lyceum. Aiden Part I{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Ignorance is Strength: The Dystopia Triptych 1}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {57-72}, publisher = {Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press}, address = {New York/London}, abstract = {

A three-part dystopia in which a company is developing a neurological educational link that will give all children access to knowledge and help in understanding it. The eutopian possibilities of the project are derailed when the teenage son of the developer is killed in an accident, and she becomes fixed on the neurolink, which had named after her son. In the second part, the man who took over its development makes it possible for the link to be shared, and it spreads throughout the population beyond schools, with some seeing the results positively and others seeing them negatively. In the third part, the developer creates an android that can access the neurolink and looks and acts as if it is human.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Guyanese author}, isbn = {979-8677287572 979-8677291012 979-8677298424}, author = {Karin Lowachee (b. 1973)}, editor = {John Joseph Adams (b. 1976) and Hugh [Crocker] Howey (b. 1975) and Christine Yant} } @booklet {11430, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Sun Will Always Sing{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Verge Better Worlds}, year = {2019}, month = {February 4, 2019)}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future in which humans and seimei (immortal AI who have their own language) have cooperated to mitigate the damage to Earth and plan to populate another planet with the focus on carrying out that plan told through the eyes of a seimei.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Guyanese author}, url = {https://www.theverge.com/2019/2/4/18139371/karin-lowachee-sci-fi-story-video-seimei-ai-better-worlds }, author = {Karin Lowachee (b. 1973)} } @booklet {9466, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Waving at Trains{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Boston Review}, volume = {Special issue on Global Dystopias }, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {141-44}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which climate change has killed most people.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Guyanese author, Jamaican author, Trinidadian author, US author}, author = {[Noelle] Nalo Hopkinson (b. 1960)}, editor = {Junot D{\'\i}az} } @booklet {5102, title = {Midnight Robber}, year = {2000}, month = {2000}, publisher = {Warner Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The planet Toussaint has been colonized from the Caribbean and replicated the positive and negative aspects of Caribbean culture. It expels its criminals to the dystopian New Half-Way Tree.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Guyanese author, Jamaican author, Trinidadian author, US author}, author = {[Noelle] Nalo Hopkinson (b. 1960)} } @booklet {4894, title = {Brown Girl in the Ring}, year = {1998}, month = {1998}, publisher = {Warner Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Magic realism set in a future Toronto dystopia.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Guyanese author, Jamaican author, Trinidadian author, US author}, author = {[Noelle] Nalo Hopkinson (b. 1960)} } @booklet {2907, title = {"From Utopia to Paradise"}, howpublished = {From Utopia to Paradise}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, pages = {[1]. 24 pp.}, publisher = {Petamber Persaud}, address = {[Campbellville, Guyana]}, abstract = {

Dialect poem of Guyana as eutopia.

}, keywords = {Guyanese author}, author = {Petamber Persaud} } @booklet {8521, title = {The Mad MacMullochs}, year = {1959}, note = {

Rpt. under the author\’s name London: Peter Owen, 1961.

}, month = {1959}, publisher = {Peter Owen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is set on Barbados, and while much of it concerns a love story, three of the women involved live on a plantation with white, colored, and black members living equally under a set of chosen rules.

}, keywords = {English author, Guyanese author, Male author}, author = {[Edgar Austin] [Mittelh{\"o}lzer] (1909-65)} } @booklet {1382, title = {Shadows Move Among Them}, year = {1951}, month = {1951}, publisher = {Peter Nevill}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a religious community in British Guiana, the Brethren of Christ the Man, which can be considered a flawed utopia. The religion is open and treats Christ as a model rather than in any sense supernatural, but the treatment of the people in the community, particularly the natives, is both liberal and very cruel.

}, keywords = {Guyanese author, Male author, UK author}, author = {Edgar [Austin] Mittelh{\"o}lzer (1909-65)} }